2014 Coupe de France Final

The 2014 Coupe de France Final decided the winner of the 2013–14 Coupe de France, the 97th season of France's premier football cup. It was played on 3 May at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis, Paris.

2014 Coupe de France Final
Event2013–14 Coupe de France
Date3 May 2014
VenueStade de France, Saint-Denis
RefereeTony Chapron
Attendance80,000

In the final, Guingamp beat Rennes 20 in a Derby Breton to win their second Coupe de France title. By winning, they qualified for the Group Stage of the 2014–15 UEFA Europa League, and the 2014 Trophée des Champions against the 2013–14 Ligue 1 champions Paris Saint-Germain.

Background

The match was Rennes' sixth final, of which they had won two (1965 and 1971). Their most recent final was in 2009, which they lost 2-1 to Guingamp. That was Guingamp's second appearance in the final after their unsuccessful attempt in 1997 when they lost on penalties to Nice.[1]

Route to the final

Rennes Round Guingamp
Opponent Result 2013–14 Coupe de France Opponent Result
Valenciennes 1–1 (8-7 p) Round of 64 FC Bourg-Péronnas 2–0
Boulogne 2–0 Round of 32 Concarneau 3-2 AET
Auxerre 1–0 Round of 16 Île-Rousse 2–0
Lille 2–0 Quarterfinals Cannes 2–0
Angers 3–2 Semifinals Monaco 3–1 AET

Rennes

Rennes, of Ligue 1, began their campaign in the Round of 64 on 4 January at home to fellow top-flight team Valenciennes, winning 8-7 on penalties. In the next round, they won 2-0 at third-tier Boulogne, with goals from Anders Konradsen and Silvio Romero. In the Round of 16, away to Ligue 2 Auxerre, they won via a first-half Foued Kadir goal. Rennes then beat Lille 2-0 at home, with goals from Kamil Grosicki and Romain Alessandrini.[2] In their semi-final on 15 April, Rennes beat second-tier Angers 3-2 at home, with Ola Toivonen, Grosicki and Jean Makoun scoring.[3]

Guingamp

Guingamp, also of Ligue 1, entered into the Round of 64, where they played away to third-tier Bourg-Péronnas on 5 January and won via first-half goals from Claudio Beauvue and Mustapha Yatabaré. They went away again in the Round of 32, to fifth-tier Concarneau, and won 3-2 in extra-time after a 1-1 regulation-time draw, Yatabaré (2) and Beauvue again the scorers. In the Round of 16 Guingamp travelled to Corsica to play another fifth-tier club, Île-Rousse, who had reached that stage by defeating holders Bordeaux. Goals from Grégory Cerdan and Mustapha Diallo sent Guingamp into the quarter-finals, where they played AS Cannes and won 2-0 away again, through another Yatabaré brace. In the semi-final on 16 April 2014, Guingamp played at home against their first top-flight opponents, Monaco. Yatabaré scored early on, but Dimitar Berbatov equalised before half-time. The scores remained level into the second half of extra time, in which Guingamp scored twice, through Yatabaré and Fatih Atık.[4]

Match

Summary

Jonathan Martins Pereira scored the first goal for Guingamp with a volley from the edge of the area in the 37th minute, and Mustapha Yatabaré got the second in the 46th minute with a powerful downward header from Steeven Langil's left-wing cross.

Details

Rennes0–2Guingamp
Report
Report
Martins Pereira  37'
Yatabaré  46'
RENNES:
GK1 Benoît Costil
RB29 Romain Danzé (c)
CB5 Jean-Armel Kana-Biyik
CB22 Sylvain Armand
LB12 Steven Moreira
CM23 Anders Konradsen 62'
CM28 Abdoulaye Doucouré
CM15 Jean Makoun 68'
RW6 Kamil Grosicki 52'
LW19 Romain Alessandrini
FW9 Ola Toivonen
Substitutes:
GK30 Cheick N'Diaye
DF21 John Boye
MF10 Foued Kadir
MF14 Tiémoué Bakayoko
MF17 Vincent Pajot 68'
FW11 Nélson Oliveira 62'
FW24 Paul-Georges Ntep 52'
Manager:
Philippe Montanier
GUINGAMP:
GK30 Mamadou Samassa
RB6 Jonathan Martins Pereira
CB29 Christophe Kerbrat
CB15 Jérémy Sorbon
LB7 Dorian Lévêque
CM10 Younousse Sankharé
CM18 Lionel Mathis (c)
RM8 Claudio Beauvue 84'
LM11 Steeven Langil 79'
FW13 Christophe Mandanne 69'
FW9 Mustapha Yatabaré
Substitutes:
GK16 Guy N'dy Assembé
DF4 Baissama Sankoh
MF5 Mustapha Diallo 69'
MF26 Thibault Giresse 79'
MF28 Fatih Atık 84'
FW14 Ladislas Douniama
FW17 Rachid Alioui
Manager:
Jocelyn Gourvennec

MATCH OFFICIALS

MAN OF THE MATCH

  • TBD

MATCH RULES

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
  • Seven named substitutes.
  • Maximum of three substitutions.

References

  1. "France - List of Cup Finals". RSSSF. Retrieved 15 April 2014.
  2. "Coupe de France: Rennes 2 Lille 0". Four Four Two. 27 March 2014. Retrieved 9 September 2014.
  3. "Coupe de France: Rennes 3 Angers 2". Four Four Two. 15 April 2014. Retrieved 9 September 2014.
  4. "Coupe de France: Guingamp beat Monaco 3-1 AET to reach final". Sky Sports News. 17 April 2014. Retrieved 18 April 2014.

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